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Handler functions that terminate the program are typically used to cause orderly cleanup or recovery from program error signals and interactive interrupts.
The cleanest way for a handler to terminate the process is to raise the same signal that ran the handler in the first place. Here is how to do this:
volatile sig_atomic_t fatal_error_in_progress = 0; void fatal_error_signal (int sig) {
/* Since this handler is established for more than one kind of signal, it might still get invoked recursively by delivery of some other kind of signal. Use a static variable to keep track of that. */ if (fatal_error_in_progress) raise (sig); fatal_error_in_progress = 1;
/* Now do the clean up actions: - reset terminal modes - kill child processes - remove lock files */ …
/* Now reraise the signal. We reactivate the signal’s default handling, which is to terminate the process. We could just callexit
orabort
, but reraising the signal sets the return status from the process correctly. */ signal (sig, SIG_DFL); raise (sig); }